$68.64
The original price was $312.50
your new price would be 101.56 with a 20% discount from 126.95
Discount is 28 divided by 4, so new price is 28 x 3/4...
499.40 = 7% of original price which was therefore 49940/7 ie 7134.30
60 percent off
The original price was $312.50
your new price would be 101.56 with a 20% discount from 126.95
Discount is 28 divided by 4, so new price is 28 x 3/4...
Let X be the original price .05X = first discount new price is X-.05X .20(X-.05X) = 2nd discount new price is X -.05X - .20(X-.05X) new price = X - .05X -.20X + .01X = X - .24X equiv discount = .24 = 24%
499.40 = 7% of original price which was therefore 49940/7 ie 7134.30
To compute a 10 percent discount, simply take 90 percent (100 percent minus 10 percent) of the original price. This is .10 x 59.95. Likewise, a 25 percent discount is 75 percent of the original price. So compute .75 x 75.99.
60 percent off
Original price - discount = new price Original price - (Original price x 0.15) = 18.00 Which can be written as: 1 Original price - 0.15 Original price = 18.00 Which can be written as: 0.85 Original price = 18.00 Wich can be written as: Original price = 18.00 / 0.85 Original price = 21.18 Note that since there is 15% off in the original price, the new price is essentially (100% - 15%) = 85% of the original price.
9%
Not necessarily. It depends on whether the 3% is based on the already discounted price or the original full price: eg original price 100, less 5% = 95. Taking 3% off this is a further 2.85 giving a new nett of 92.15. A straight 8% would leave 92 exactly...
new price = 14.99 discount = 5.00
Convert the percent of increase into a decimal, multiply that by the original price and take that answer, and add it on to the original price. BAM. new price:)